Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
University of California
Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources

Slow food on a budget

Fast food is cheap, but an Associated Press story that moved on the wire yesterday offered help for eating "slower food" on a budget. AP reporter Michelle Locke Ho opened her story by making examples of two slow-food products: $20 handcrafted cheese and $100 free-range turkey. She talked to UC Davis food systems analyst Gail Feenstra about what appears to be a pricy trend.

"It's been sort of touted as being an upper-income thing, which is unfortunate because that is not the bottom line," Feenstra was quoted. "The slow food movement needs to be about everybody having access to good quality food."

The story was organized into five sections, each with suggestions for cutting the cost of "slow food."

  • Do the math and think big
  • Organize to localize
  • Be a bargain hunter, gatherer
  • Get green at the grocery
  • Timing is everything

For the "organize to localize" section, Locke Ho spoke to UC Cooperative Extension nutrition, family and consumer sciences advisor Cathi Lamp of Tulare County. Lamp said a lack of large grocery stores and farmers markets in rural areas can be overcome with community organization.

"In one community too small to support a full market, parents are helping run a vegetable stand once a week at an elementary school," Lamp was paraphrased.

Posted on Wednesday, October 22, 2008 at 2:09 PM
Tags: slow food (3)

Comments:

1.
Tuolumne County has just launched its own Slow Food Consortium. It is critical that "Foodie" persona is not equated with upper income status. If so, then it's just plain old snobbery, rather than a shift in conscious decision-making. The Slow Food Movement is an essential link to community-based agricultural support and good nutrition for ALL.  
 
I love the phrase that the Farm Aid People use (that's Willy Nelson's project): The Good Food Movement. The goal of the over-arching theme is to break from our highly processed fast-food eating habits, and take a look at fresh food again. If we eat more like our great-grandparents ate, then we'd be buying local, growing our own, eating fresh and stretching those food dollars a very long way!

Posted by BZ on October 25, 2008 at 11:58 AM

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